Washington
Washington State tops No. 19 UCLA 65-61 for Pac-12 title
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Washington State capped off probably the most unbelievable runs in Pac-12 Match historical past by successful the college’s first title.
Charlisse Leger-Walker scored 23 factors and Bella Murekatete added 21 because the seventh-seeded Cougars earned a visit to the NCAA Match by beating No. 19 UCLA 65-61 within the championship sport Sunday.
“I’d have by no means thought we might do it,” fifth-year coach Kamie Ethridge stated. “I do not even assume once I took the job I assumed this was attainable in this type of a league.”
Washington State gained 4 video games in 5 days, beating No. 10 seed California, No. 2 seed Utah, No. 3 seed Colorado and eventually UCLA.
Leger-Walker carried them to the championship.
“By no means would have thought we’d be doing that,” she stated of chopping down the web after successful the title. “That second simply felt so surreal.”
It had been a tough season for the New Zealand native, who went dwelling twice through the season. As soon as to see her grandmother, Mere Smith, when she grew to become ailing, and a second time for Smith’s funeral.
On Sunday, Leger-Walker honored her grandmother.
“This entire match, I believe, my Nana’s been trying over me,” she stated. “This one was positively for her and for my household again dwelling.”
It was the first-ever Pac-12 championship for Washington State in a girls’s sport. Will probably be the Cougars’ third straight look within the NCAA Match.
Up by three with 9 seconds left, Washington State’s Astera Tuhina obtained a chunk of a 3-point try by UCLA’s Charisma Osborne. With the arrow pointing their method, the Cougars took possession after a held ball on the rebound, and Tara Wallack hit one among two free throws with 5.1 seconds left to provide Washington State a four-point lead.
Tuhina had six assists and Wallack added eight rebounds for the Cougars (23-10).
Whereas it’s been gamers like Leger-Walker and Murekatete grabbing the headlines, Tuhina’s teammates praised her maturity and poise as a freshman.
“We’ve been saying because the first time she stepped on the campus, Astera shouldn’t be a freshman,” Murekatete stated. “She has the expertise, she has the IQ — the whole lot about AT — she has an awesome feeling for the sport. I’m simply so blessed and grateful to have her on the workforce.
“Her poise, how she reads the protection, how she’s so good at offense actually helped us with each single factor we wanted within the final second,” Murekatete added.
Osborne led the Bruins (25-9) with 19 factors. Kiki Rice scored 13 factors and Emily Bessoir added 11 for UCLA.
“I believe we positively might have executed higher setting new screens, play with tempo, play with tempo,” Rice stated. “I believe it’s extra on us with the ability to execute our offense and get the appears to be like that we wish to get.”
Washington State shot 22 of 41 (53.7%) from the ground, together with 7 of 11 (63.6%) from 3-point vary. The Cougars had been essentially the most environment friendly workforce within the match, capturing 46.2% (92 of 199).
UCLA got here in because the highest-scoring workforce within the match, averaging 74.3 factors on 38.5% capturing after three video games, however struggled to seek out any rhythm from the opening tip, suffocated by the match’s No. 1 scoring protection. The Bruins completed 22 of 60 (36.7%) from the ground and 26.3% (5 of 19) from 3-point vary.
Although they held a four-point lead after one quarter, the Bruins had been chilly from the outset. They hit simply 35% (7 of 20) within the first quarter, together with 1 of 6 (16.7%) from 3-point vary, and adopted that with a 30.8% clip (4 of 13) within the second interval.
MORE CHARLISSE
Leger-Walker set the match file with 76 factors. She reached double figures in every sport, scoring 23, 15, 15 and 23 factors. Her 11 3-pointers tied for the sixth most made in a single match.
ALL TOURNAMENT TEAM
Becoming a member of Leger-Walker on the All-Match workforce had been Murekatete, Rice and Osborne, together with Emily Bessoir (UCLA) and Cameron Brink (Stanford).
BIG PICTURE
Washington State: The Cougars had been the primary No. 7 seed to advance to the Pac-12 championship sport. The earlier lowest seed to make the championship spherical was the No. 6 seed, in 2009 (USC) and 2022 (Utah).
UCLA: After being held to simply two factors within the first half, on 1-of-6 capturing, Rice bolstered the Bruins’ 8-0 begin to the third quarter with 5 factors. Within the second half, the freshman guard hit 4 of 10 from the sphere.
UP NEXT
The groups await their NCAA Match seeding, with UCLA certain to obtain an at-large bid.
___
AP girls’s school basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/womens-college-basketball and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-womens-college-basketball-poll and https://twitter.com/AP_Top25
Washington
Washington Commanders Roster Moves: Colson Yankoff is back!
The Washington Commanders are in Detroit to play the Lions tonight at 8pm. It’s been a pretty quiet, and healthy, week for the Commanders as they prepared for their first divisional playoff game since 2006. They only ruled one player out for tonight’s game, and just announced their practice squad elevations and roster moves.
Rookie LB Jordan Magee was ruled out after aggravating his hamstring injury. He was placed on injured reserve today. That gives Washington an open roster spot which was used to activate TE Colson Yankoff from IR. His 21-day practice window was opened last Wednesday, and he was a full participant in every practice over the last two weeks.
Washington also elevated CB Kevon Seymour and DE Andre Jones Jr from the practice squad for tonight’s playoff game. Seymour has been used exclusively on special teams this season. Andre Jones Jr was elevated twice during the season, and played 17 snaps on defense.
We have made the following roster moves:
— Placed LB Jordan Magee on the Reserve/Injured List
— Activated TE Colson Yankoff from the Reserve/Injured List and removed him from the injury report
— Elevated DE Andre Jones Jr. and CB Kevon Seymour from the practice squad pic.twitter.com/1z96W9N2Xb— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) January 18, 2025
Washington
Washington pharmacists prescribe abortion pills through new pilot program • Oklahoma Voice
A Washington state-based nonprofit has launched a program training pharmacists to prescribe abortion medications via telehealth, a model that organizers hope other states will adopt to expand abortion access.
Abortion is broadly legal in Washington state up to the point of fetal viability, which is generally considered to be between 24 and 26 weeks of pregnancy. But Dr. Beth Rivin, president and CEO of nonprofit Uplift International, said there are still many individuals who face barriers to abortion access in Washington because of where they live, how much money they make and other factors. Those people can benefit most from having access to telehealth, Rivin said, and having pharmacists available helps increase that availability.
The nonprofit partnered with an online pharmacy called Honeybee Health to launch what they’re calling the Pharmacist Abortion Access Project. Ten pharmacists were recruited and trained to prescribe mifepristone and misoprostol, the standard U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved medication abortion regimen, to patients in Washington up to 10 weeks’ gestation.
Rivin said the team created its training protocol with Dr. Sarah Prager, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Washington. The program also has a list of clinics where patients can be referred if any in-person follow-up care is necessary, including ultrasounds, blood tests or other exams.
“If (patients) had questions, the platform allowed for messaging between the pharmacist and the individual, and patients were followed up with at one week and four to five weeks after prescriptions were written,” Rivin said.
Over the past two years, anti-abortion groups have increasingly called for more state legislation targeting abortion drugs, alleging telemedicine for abortion pills is dangerous to a pregnant person’s health. Research has repeatedly shown that telehealth prescriptions are just as safe as in-person treatment, with one recent study showing 99.7% of patients out of a sample of 6,000 did not experience any serious complications. Similarly, 97.7% didn’t need any form of additional follow-up care.
“Research confirms that medication abortion can be prescribed through telehealth just as safely as in person, and it confirms that pharmacists can specifically prescribe medication abortion,” Rivin told States Newsroom. “The training they undergo through (the project) mirrors the training that other providers receive.”
The Heritage Foundation, the conservative group behind a set of policies known as Project 2025, has gathered several examples of abortion pills given to pregnant women without their consent. Using those examples, the organization recommends states ban telemedicine and mail-order abortion pills and strengthen or enact laws targeting abortion coercion. There have also been calls to use a dormant federal law called the Comstock Act to ban abortion pills from being sent by mail altogether.
Proof of residency not required to obtain pills by mail
By the end of the Washington pilot program, which took place between Oct. 31 and Nov. 26, 2024, the pharmacists successfully prescribed medication abortion to 43 people who were deemed eligible. To qualify, aside from the applicable medical protocol, the patient needed to be 18 or older and have a Washington address where the medication could be mailed. The recipient of the medication does not need to prove they are a Washington resident, but a valid Washington address must be provided. Washington has shield laws preventing states where abortion is illegal from investigating medical providers if a resident of that state obtains an abortion in Washington.
Following the success of the pilot, Uplift International said it plans to expand the program across Washington and explore pharmacists prescribing medication abortion in person from brick-and-mortar pharmacies.
Rivin said the hope is that the project paves the way for other states to implement the same model, especially as President-elect Donald Trump takes office and Republicans in Congress may eye more federal abortion restrictions.
“It is the first step toward mainstreaming pharmacists as prescribers of medication abortion in person,” Rivin said.
Don Downing, a clinical pharmacy professor emeritus at the University of Washington and co-director of the project, said Washington has one of the most progressive pharmacy laws in the country. State law has recognized pharmacists as health care providers since 1979, allowing them to prescribe many medications approved by the FDA.
Washington shares that progressive pharmacy law status with one of its border states, Idaho, where pharmacists can also prescribe medications for minor ailments such as cold sores and allergies, as well as drugs for treatment of illnesses such as flu and strep throat. Downing said Idaho’s pharmacy laws are actually even more progressive than Washington’s.
However, Idaho has an abortion policy that could hardly be more different. It is the only state in the Northwest with a near-total abortion ban, a civil enforcement law allowing family members to sue medical providers who perform an abortion, and a so-called “abortion trafficking” law making it a felony to take a minor to a state with legal abortion access without parental permission.
Ironically, Downing said the pilot team announced the project in Idaho during an annual pharmacy meeting held at a resort in Coeur d’Alene with pharmacists from Montana, Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Alaska.
“We presented the idea of pharmacists becoming much more involved in medication abortion access at that meeting, and it was surreal because Idaho at that time was just pouncing on women’s access to abortion,” Downing said.
Providing prescriptions via telehealth first was the priority, he said, because after conducting several listening sessions before launching the pilot, the consensus among women interviewed was that they preferred the privacy of an online experience.
“If you’re in a small town, if you go to the doctor’s office, you go to the school nurse, a pharmacy, there’s a good chance you’re going to see a neighbor, a relative, and someone is for sure going to ask you what you’re doing there today,” Downing said. “Women nationwide are increasingly saying, if I can get it online the same way we buy from Amazon, if I can do this without running into my aunt, so much the better.”
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Washington
As some Washington law enforcement leaders vow to help with mass deportations, immigration advocates prepare to resist
A Washington law that’s designed to protect immigrant rights could see new challenges as President-elect Donald Trump takes office. The state’s sanctuary law restricts how local law enforcement can aid federal immigration officials.
Yet some Washington state counties appear eager to help Trump fulfill his promise of mass deportations.
“I don’t care if this is a blue state, a sanctuary state… they have an obligation,” Klickitat County Sheriff Bob Songer said in a video uploaded to his department’s social media page on Dec. 11.
The “they” Songer is talking about are government agencies he thinks should fall in line with Trump’s deportation plans, which could target millions nationwide.
RELATED: Western Washington groups scramble to admit refugees before Trump’s inauguration
The state’s Keep Washington Working Act, passed in 2019, prohibits local law enforcement from asking people their immigration status or holding someone for immigration agents. The law, however, does allow local officers to work with federal immigration officials in certain instances, such as taking down a human or drug trafficking ring, or if a person lands in state prison.
Trump’s incoming administration has signaled it plans to start mass deportations with a focus on people who’ve committed crimes. But like Trump, Songer said he wouldn’t rule out targeting people who have illegally crossed the border or overstayed a visa. Those offenses can become a federal crime if done enough times.
A Department of Homeland Security report estimates 340,000 Washington residents are in the country without legal immigration status.
“This sheriff is not going to refuse to help ICE — we will be there with ICE to do the job,” Songer said in the video.
Days after Songer posted his video, the head of Washington’s Association of Sheriffs and Police Chiefs pushed back. Steve Strachan said the work of deportations is under the jurisdiction of the federal government — not local sheriffs.
“There is no direct federal authority… over local law enforcement. That is the unique and special nature of our system in America,” he later told KUOW’s Soundside.
RELATED: Washington sheriffs may face pressure between federal agencies and state law under Trump administration
Three other Washington counties have already been given a warning from the state Attorney General’s Office for violating the Keep Washington Working Act.
In the last four years, the AG has found Adams, Clark, and Grant counties have collectively worked with ICE more than a thousand times in potential violation of state law. In Adams and Grant counties, none of those interactions with ICE were connected to a criminal matter.
The Washington Immigrant Solidarity Network, an immigrant advocacy group, has also fielded concerns in other counties for similar activity, including Franklin, Lincoln, and Whatcom counties.
“We know that Keep Washington Working is not perfect, so we are trying to ensure that we’re out doing outreach in those specific counties,” said Yahaira Padilla, a deportation defense coordinator for the organization.
The immigration journey: How long does it take to feel like an American?
When someone gets arrested and detained, her job is to help connect them with bail or legal help. She hears stories about which counties are potentially violating the Keep Washington Working Act, she said.
If a local or state law enforcement officer begins asking about immigration status, people can invoke the right to remain silent, and can refuse to sign any documents until they speak with a lawyer, Padilla said.
She added that it’s important to set up a family plan in the event someone is arrested or detained, and part of that includes calling her organization’s hotline for help.
“I’m a mother, and that’s something that I never want to think about… creating a plan for the worst to come. But we have to make sure that we are prepared,” Padilla said.
As a survivor of family separation and DACA recipient she said, her ties to this work are deeply personal.
“My story, like so many of our communities, is woven into the broader fight for immigrant justice,” she said.
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